Deconstructing gendered glorification of charitable work: A case of women in Nomiya Church

T. Musili
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Abstract

Human immunodeficiency viruses (HIV) and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), COVID-19 and Ebola have exposed the magnitude of care-related tasks on women. Most often, because of the gendered nature of domestic and reproductive roles, women are expected to assume unpaid care-related, nurturing and domestic work. Despite the valuable duties, women are economically poor and othered. These unpaid care duties are exacerbated by pandemics and ratified even further by religion. For instance, in Nomiya Church (NC), the first African independent church in Kenya, women’s experience narratives and biblical texts such as the story of the Proverbs 31 virtuous woman are used to glorify unpaid charitable work for women. Women’s virtuous personality, hard work and character are upheld in Christian spaces, thus obstructing sound work theologies. This article employed African Women’s theological lens in view of pointing out repressing and transformative tenets in charitable theologies of work for social and gender justice. While applying womanhood hermeneutics in the passage, the article points to valued behavioural postures of hard work in responding to God’s stewardship mandate. An affirmation of fair reward and accumulation of property is embraced as a familial complementary role, especially in pandemic contexts. The article amplifies the accumulation of property as a human right and the mandate of stewardship for all earth communities. Hence, charity work is a stewardship framework that all earth communities must engage in for replenishment and sustenance for all.Contribution: The article challenges literal biblical interpretations that glorify charity work. It advances a stewardship framework in understanding unpaid and charity work that all earth communities must engage in to replenish and sustain all creation. The framework affirms the dignity of all human persons through a transformational understanding of the theology of work as enabled by the African theological hermeneutics.
解构对慈善工作的性别美化:野宫教会妇女的案例
人体免疫缺陷病毒(艾滋病毒)和获得性免疫缺陷综合症(艾滋病)、COVID-19 和埃博拉病毒暴露了妇女所承担的与护理有关的任务的艰巨性。通常情况下,由于家庭和生育角色的性别性质,妇女需要承担无偿的护理、养育和家务工作。尽管妇女承担着宝贵的职责,但她们在经济上却很贫困,而且还被视为他者。大流行病加剧了这些无偿护理职责,宗教则进一步认可了这一职责。例如,在肯尼亚第一个非洲独立教会--Nomiya 教会(NC),妇女的经历叙事和圣经文本(如箴言 31 中贤惠妇女的故事)被用来美化妇女的无偿慈善工作。妇女的贤德、勤劳和品格在基督教空间中得到了维护,从而阻碍了合理的工作神学。本文从非洲妇女的神学视角出发,指出了为社会和性别公正而从事慈善工作的神学中的压制性和变革性原则。在对这段经文进行女性诠释的同时,文章指出了勤奋工作以响应上帝管理任务的重要行为姿态。对公平报酬和财产积累的肯定被视为家庭的补充角色,尤其是在大流行病的背景下。这篇文章强调了财产积累是一项人权,也是所有地球社区的管理任务。因此,慈善工作是所有地球社区必须参与的管理框架,以补充和养活所有人:这篇文章对美化慈善工作的圣经字面解释提出了质疑。文章提出了一个管理框架,以理解所有地球社区必须参与的无偿工作和慈善工作,从而补充和维持所有受造物。通过非洲神学诠释学对工作神学的变革性理解,该框架肯定了所有人的尊严。
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